Oil Spaces traces petroleum’s impact through a range of territories from across the world, showing how industrially drilled petroleum and its refined products have played a major role in transforming the built environment in ways that are often not visible or recognized. Over the past century and a half, industrially drilled petroleum has powered factories, built cities, and sustained nation-states. It has fueled ways of life and visions of progress, modernity, and disaster.
In detailed international case studies, the contributors consider petroleum’s role in the built environment and the imagination. They study how petroleum and its infrastructure have served as a source of military conflict and political and economic power, inspiring efforts to create territories and reshape geographies and national boundaries. The authors trace ruptures and continuities between colonial and postcolonial frameworks, in locations as diverse as Sumatra, northeast China, Brazil, Nigeria, Tanzania, and Kuwait as well as heritage sites including former power stations in Italy and the port of Dunkirk, once a prime gateway through which petroleum entered Europe.
By revealing petroleum’s role in organizing and imagining space globally, this book takes up a key task in imagining the possibilities of a post-oil future. It will be invaluable reading to scholars and students of architectural and urban history, planning, and geography of sustainable urban environments.
Author(s): Carola Hein
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2021
Language: English
Pages: 292
City: New York
Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Preface and Acknowledgments
Introduction
1 Space, Time, and Oil: The Global Petroleumscape
PART I: Oil, Agency, and Territoriality
2 The Original North American Petroleumscape: Oil-and-Gas Empire, Petrochemical Nation
3 Petroleumscape as Battleground: Pladjoe, Pearl in the Crown of the Bataafsche Petroleum Maatschappij (BPM/Shell) in the Dutch East Indies
4 Mapping the Persian Gulf Petroleumscape: The Production of Territory, Territoriality, and Sovereignty
5 Between Visible and Invisible: Eni and the Building of the African Petroleumscape
6 The Offshore Petroleumscape: Grids, Gods, and Giants of the North Sea
PART II: Oil, Materiality, and Cultural Practices
7 Arab Oil Towns as Petro-Histories
8 Building Brazil’s Petroleumscape on Land and Sea: Infrastructure, Expertise, and Technology
9 Precious Property: Water and Oil in Twentieth-Century Kuwait
10 Dimensions of the Petroleumscape in the Port and the City of Hamburg
11 “Production First, Livelihood Second”: The Life and Death of Worker-Peasant Model Villages in a Chinese Oil Field
PART III: Oil Ecologies and Imaginaries
12 Energy Humanities and the Petroleumscape
13 Antwerp’s Petroleumscape: Imagining the Carbon Age
14 Power Stations and Petroleum Heritage in Italy: The Case of Porto Tolle
15 Petroleumscape as Heritage Landscape: The Case of the Dunkirk Port City Region
Biographies
Index